Menu

Peninsular Thinking A conversation about Bremerton, Port Orchard, Poulsbo, Silverdale, Bainbridge Island, Kingston, Manchester, Seabeck, Southworth, Suquamish, Belfair, Keyport, Olalla, Bangor, Hansville, Indianola, Port Gamble, Allyn, Port Ludlow, Gig Harbor and every once in a while something about the good folks who don't have the good fortune to live here.

All on board with all-day kindergarten?

From what we hear from school district officials in Kitsap and
North Mason counties, the demand among families for all-day
kindergarten is high.

Kids who take part in enriched early learning programs —
including all-day kindergarten — have greater success throughout
their academic career,
the experts say.
Local districts are joining the all-day kindergarten movement,
using different models and funding sources. South Kitsap School
District was the
latest to announce its plans to expand all-day kindergarten to
all of its 10 elementary schools.

By the 2017-2018 school year, all districts in Washington State
will be asked to offer all-day kindergarten programs, and the state
by then is supposed to cover the entire cost.

Steve Gardner, in
his story earlier this month, quoted a North Kitsap parent,
Stacie Schmechel, who said parents she’s heard from want half-day
kindergarten as an option. Schmechel said studies show the full-day
model works well for underachieving and overachieving students, but
has little impact on those in between.

South Kitsap Superintendent Michelle Reid, in a recent memo to
staff, said research shows the largest gains from an all-day
program occur among students who enter kindergarten with the lowest
skills, “though even students who arrive well prepared for
kindergarten will benefit from an enhanced and extended day
program.”

But what about those parents who just don’t want to send their
5-year-old off for a full school day?

Reid said the district, at least for the foreseeable future,
would accommodate those families.

“We recognize parents are every child’s first teacher, and there
are parents who are willing and have the time to provide enrichment
for their children,” Reid said. “I think parents need choices, and
we’re a district that believes in providing parents choices.”

But the have-it-your-way model presents some logistical
problems. You couldn’t mix half-day and all-day kids in one
classroom, Reid said. Districts already will need more space for
the all-day programs, and if the numbers of families in each camp
didn’t divide neatly, the district would have to make some hard
choices or big accommodations, it seems.

Reid said the possibility that the half-day students could fall
behind the full-day kids is a real concern. But until all-day
kindergarten becomes a universal concept schools can’t/shouldn’t
force families who want that half-day at home with their child, she
said.

Schmechel argues that parents who elect to keep their children
home probably have the time to devote to helping them learn, so it
is unlikely they would lag behind their peers.

Brenda Ward, North Kitsap’s director of elementary education,
said the request for half-day kindergarten when an all-day program
is available would be unusual, based on her experience.

Peggy Ellis, Ward’s counterpart in the Central Kitsap School
District, said she had not seen any parents requesting half-day
classes there. CKSD will offer free, all-day kindergarten at all
its elementary schools next year.

Some children, especially those who have had little preschool
experience, have trouble adjusting, Ellis said. In that case,
allowing half-day attendance early in the school year would be an
option.

Where does your family stand on the option of all-day
kindergarten? Do you welcome it as a constructive alternative to
day care that you’d be paying for anyway? If you have the option to
stay home with your child, would you take advantage of an all-day
program? Or would you rather keep their schooling half-day for that
one last year?

Post navigation

One thought on “All on board with all-day kindergarten?”

If you don’t have time to enrich your child, then don’t have children. Full day kindergarten is popular because it’s state paid daycare. That money would be better spent putting it to offering two free years of college.